The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Academic talks of experience­s in disaster zone

INDONESIA: Researcher says ‘liquefied’ soil may have added to tragic death toll

- JAKE KEITH jkeith@thecourier.co.uk

A Dundee researcher says “liquefied” soil may have caused hundreds of deaths following the devastatin­g earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia.

Dr Andrew Brennan, an academic at Dundee University, said high ground water levels in the province of Central Sulawesi may have allowed soil to liquefy, a phenomenon which occurs when it is shaken violently, pushing moisture to the surface and making ground unstable.

This triggered several landslides that buried hundreds of homes in September.

Dr Brennan, from the university’s School of Science and Engineerin­g, recently returned from the city of Palu where he had been working in his capacity as an expert in soil liquefacti­on – which may have exacerbate­d the loss of life.

More than 2,000 people died after a magnitude 7.5 earthquake triggered a tsunami that struck the coast of the country’s Minahasa Peninsula. A further 10,000 were injured and more than 200,000 people are believed to have been displaced, with entire communitie­s wiped out by the disaster.

Dr Brennan travelled to south-east Asia as part of the Earthquake Engineerin­g Field Investigat­ion Team (EEFIT), which carries out technical evaluation­s of structures, civil engineerin­g works and industrial projects in the aftermath of seismic events.

He said witnessing the aftermath of the disaster was an emotional experience.

“At one point I was walking over the top of a landslide, which had buried a whole town and seeing people’s personal effects just scattered on the ground was an extremely moving experience,” he said.

“But it also brought home the importance of the work we were doing in evaluating whether there are implicatio­ns for similar sites worldwide, work which we hope may be able to save lives in the future.”

He added: “The sheer scale of soil movement and the distance it can travel were beyond what I expected.

“All slopes in the world are being perpetuall­y tested but several conditions mean they tend to stay in place. Occasional­ly, however, there tends to be a combinatio­n of factors and tragedies like this occur.

“Some of the geological evidence suggests that there are steep slopes underneath the surface. The sand on top is made of several layers, but there are places in the city with steeper slopes and layers of different soil that can act as sliding surfaces, which appear to have contribute­d here.”

 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? The effects of the earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia, where Dundee University researcher Dr Andrew Brennan has visited.
Picture: Getty. The effects of the earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia, where Dundee University researcher Dr Andrew Brennan has visited.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom